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Russian-held Crimea restricts motorcycle use, claiming they sound like drones

Moscow-installed officials in Crimea have banned motorised vehicles such as quad bikes, motorcycles and scooters from being used at night. They claim that they sound like drone attacks.

The peninsula's Russian-installed Governor, Sergei Aksyonov said that the ban would be enforced between 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. on Wednesday. He called it a temporary measure for the protection of military and important facilities.

The moped's noise interferes with the operation of defense systems. "Their engines sound like drones,"?Oleg?Kryuchkov, Aksyonov’s advisor, said on Telegram separately on Tuesday. "The enemy is enlisting your children for nighttime rides."

The Crimea ban does not apply to larger vehicles or cars. Ukraine recently intensified drone attacks against?Crimea - home to Russia's Black Sea Fleet - targeting the peninsula’s supply routes, causing a fuel shortage as the holiday season begins.

Mikhail Razvozhayev said that the limit of 20 litres of fuel (5.3 gallons of gasoline) per car would remain at local petrol stations, in a Telegram message posted late Tuesday. Sources say that a Ukrainian drone attack on Tuesday halted the operations of the oil refinery in Moscow, adding to the damage done by the strike and spreading the fuel crisis further into the country.

On Wednesday morning, Sergei Sobyanin, the Mayor of Moscow, said that Russian defence systems had shot down 10 drones headed for Moscow overnight. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that Russia should make peace in Ukraine after a "very successful" meeting with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Tuesday. His comments sparked cautious optimism from G7 leaders about the possibility of a peace agreement. (Reporting and editing by Lincoln Feast in Tokyo. Reporting by Jekaterina Glubkova.

(source: Reuters)